Functional impact of the G279S substitution in the adenosine A1-receptor (A1R-G279S7.44), a mutation associated with Parkinson's disease

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Abstract

In medium-size, spiny striatal neurons of the direct pathway, dopamine D1- and adenosine A1-receptors are coexpressed and are mutually antagonistic. Recently, a mutation in the gene encoding the A1-receptor (A1R), A1R-G279S7.44, was identified in an Iranian family: two affected offspring suffered from early-onset L-DOPA-responsive Parkinson's disease. The link between the mutation and the phenotype is unclear. Here, we explored the functional consequence of the G279S substitution on the activity of the A1-receptor after heterologous expression in HEK293 cells. The mutation did not affect surface expression and ligand binding but changed the susceptibility to heat denaturation: the thermodynamic stability of A1R-G279S7.44 was enhanced by about 2 and 8 K when compared with wild-type A1-receptor and A1R-Y288A7.53 (a folding-deficient variant used as a reference), respectively. In contrast, the kinetic stability was reduced, indicating a lower energy barrier for conformational transitions in A1R-G279S7.44 (73 6 23 kJ/mol) than in wild-type A1R (135 6 4 kJ/mol) or in A1R-Y288A7.53 (184 6 24 kJ/mol). Consistent with this lower energy barrier, A1R-G279S7.44 was more effective in promoting guanine nucleotide exchange than wild-type A1R. We detected similar levels of complexes formed between D1-receptors and wild-type A1R or A1R-G279S7.44 by coimmunoprecipitation and bioluminescence resonance energy transfer. However, lower concentrations of agonist were required for half-maximum inhibition of dopamine-induced cAMP accumulation in cells coexpressing D1-receptor and A1R-G279S7.44 than in those coexpressing wild-type A1R. These observations predict enhanced inhibition of dopaminergic signaling by A1R-G279S7.44 in vivo, consistent with a pathogenic role in Parkinson's disease.

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Nasrollahi-Shirazi, S., Szöllösi, D., Yang, Q., Muratspahic, E., El-Kasaby, A., Sucic, S., … Freissmuth, M. (2020). Functional impact of the G279S substitution in the adenosine A1-receptor (A1R-G279S7.44), a mutation associated with Parkinson’s disease. Molecular Pharmacology, 98(3), 250–266. https://doi.org/10.1124/mol.120.000003

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